68 nights onboard Seabourn Pursuit

68-Day Kimberley Expedition & Remote Islands Of The Pacific

Winners 2022 Grand Prix Award
Winners 2022 Best Specialist Cruise Line
Winners 2022 Best for Wellbeing Spas
Winners 2022 Best for Accommodation

Construction for Seabourn Pursuit began in fall 2020 during a ceremony in San Giorgo di Nogare, Italy, and the build process is well underway. The ship is scheduled for delivery in 2023, with its sister ship, Seabourn Venture, slated for delivery in 2022.

Leaving from: Broome, Western Australia
Cruise ship: Seabourn Pursuit
Visiting: Broome, Western Australia Lacepede Islands, Western Australia Talbot Bay, Western Australia Montgomery Reef, Western Australia
Seabourn Logo
Seabourn

For decadent luxury that sails hand-in-hand with personalised experience and in-depth access to world heritage, may we introduce Seabourn Cruises.

Blending nimble power and grace with beautifully designed spaces, Seabourn ships can be likened to lavish resorts. Except, uniquely, the staff already know you just as they also remember your favourite drink.

264
Passengers
120
Crew
2023
Launched
23000t
Tonnage
170m
Length
26m
Width
19kts
Speed
8
Decks
Cruise Itinerary
Day 1
Broome, Western Australia, Australia
Day 2
Lacepede Islands, Western Australia, Australia
Day 3
Talbot Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Day 4
Montgomery Reef, Western Australia, Australia
Day 4
Freshwater Cove, Australia
Day 5
Kuri Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Day 6
Hunter River & Mitchell Falls, Western Australia, Australia
Day 8
Ashmore and Cartier Islands, Australia
Day 9
Vansittart Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Day 10
River travel
Day 12
Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Day 15
Agats, Indonesia
Day 17
Kokas, Indonesia
Day 18
Misool, Raja Ampat, Indonesia
Day 19
Gam Island, Indonesia
Day 19
Kri Island, Indonesia
Day 20
Manokwari, Irian Jaya, Indonesia
Days 21 - 22
Cenderawasih Bay, Indonesia
Day 23
Jayapura, Irian Jaya, Indonesia
Day 24
Vanimo, Papua New Guinea
Day 26
Garove Island, Papua New Guinea
Day 27
Duke of York Island, Papua New Guinea
Day 27
Rabaul, Bismarck Archipelago, Papua New Guinea
Day 29
Gizo, Solomon Islands
Day 30
Honiara, Guadalcanal Island, Solomon Islands
Day 32
Vanikoro Island, Solomon Islands
Day 33
Ambrym, Vanuatu
Day 35
Lautoka, Fiji
Day 36
Kadavu Island, Fiji
Day 37
Fulaga Island, Fiji
Day 38
Pangai, Tonga
Day 38
Nukupule, Tonga
Day 39
Vava'u, Tonga
Day 42
Apia, Samoa
Day 43
Alofi, Niue
Day 45
Aitutaki, Cook Islands
Day 47
Raiatea, French Polynesia
Day 48
Huahine, French Polynesia
Day 49
Papeete, Tahiti, French Polynesia
Day 50
Anaa, French Polynesia
Day 51
Fakarava, French Polynesia
Day 55
Pitcairn Island, Pitcairn
Day 56
Henderson Island, Pitcairn
Day 57
Ducie Island, Pitcairn
Days 60 - 61
Hangaroa, Easter Island, Chile
Day 66
Alejandro Selkirk Island, Chile
Day 67
San Juan Bautista (Robinson Crusoe Island), Chile
Day 69
San Antonio, Chile
Broome, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 1
Broome, Western Australia, Australia
Traffic in the Broome Harbour (a very busy working harbour) is restricted, requiring special permits for all vehicles accessing the pier area. Guests are not permitted in this area on an individual basis. In order to make disembarkation as smooth as possible Silversea will be providing a group motorcoach transfer from the pier to the airport.  This transfer will depart shortly after the ship is cleared.  Exact timings will be communicated by the ship's staff.Guests who do not wish to go to the airport immediately following disembarkation will be transferred to Pearl Luggers, located 10 - 15 minutes from the airport, where taxis are available for hire. 
Lacepede Islands, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 2
Lacepede Islands, Western Australia, Australia
The Lacepedes are a group of four islands, perfectly nestled off the Kimberley coast. The islands are imperative to Australia’s rich wildlife as they are key breeding habitats for Green Turtles and are home to a wealth of birds such as Masked Boobies, Australian Pelicans, Lesser Frigatebirds and the largest colony of Brown Bobbies in the world. Join your expedition team for a guided zodiac tour to view the prolific wildlife. Due to the sensitive nature of the environment, landings are prohibited on the Lacepede Islands.
Talbot Bay, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 3
Talbot Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Montgomery Reef, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 4
Montgomery Reef, Western Australia, Australia
Freshwater Cove, Australia image
Day 4
Freshwater Cove, Australia
Kuri Bay, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 5
Kuri Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Hunter River & Mitchell Falls, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 6
Hunter River & Mitchell Falls, Western Australia, Australia
Ashmore and Cartier Islands, Australia image
Day 8
Ashmore and Cartier Islands, Australia
Ashmore Reef is a sanctuary for seabirds, shorebirds, marine turtles, dugongs, and many other marine species. Each year around 100,000 seabirds breed on Ashmore Reef including great knots, crested terns and white-tailed tropicbirds. The sanctuary zone provides the highest level of protection for wildlife.
Vansittart Bay, Western Australia, Australia image
Day 9
Vansittart Bay, Western Australia, Australia
Vansittart Bay is a beautifully protected large bay with several islands and coves. Jar Island contains ancient rock art galleries depicting the Gwion Gwion style unique to the Kimberley region. Mainly neglected by, or unknown to, the early European researchers of Aboriginal culture in the Kimberley in favour of the dominant & more dramatic Wandjina art, Gwion Gwion art has in recent years gained world prominence. Join your Expedition Team ashore for a short walk, past some fascinating rock formations, to the site of the Gwion Gwion art galleries.
River travel image
Day 10
River travel
Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia image
Day 12
Darwin, Northern Territory, Australia
Darwin is Australia's most colorful, and exotic, capital city. Surrounded on three sides by the turquoise waters of the Timor Sea, the streets are lined with tropical flowers and trees. Warm and dry in winter, hot and steamy in summer, it's a relaxed and casual place, as well as a beguiling blend of tropical frontier outpost and Outback hardiness. Thanks to its close proximity to Southeast Asia and its multicultural population it also seems more like Asia than the rest of Australia. Darwin is a city that has always had to fight for its survival. The seductiveness of contemporary Darwin lifestyles belies a history of failed attempts that date from 1824 when Europeans attempted to establish an enclave in this harsh, unyielding climate. The original 1869 settlement, called Palmerston, was built on a parcel of mangrove wetlands and scrub forest that had changed little in 15 million years. It was not until 1911, after it had already weathered the disastrous cyclones of 1878, 1882, and 1897, that the town was named after the scientist who had visited Australia's shores aboard the Beagle in 1839. During World War II it was bombed more than 60 times, as the harbor full of warships was a prime target for the Japanese war planes. Then, on the night of Christmas Eve 1974, the city was almost completely destroyed by Cyclone Tracy, Australia’s greatest natural disaster. It's a tribute to those who stayed and to those who have come to live here after Tracy that the rebuilt city now thrives as an administrative and commercial center for northern Australia. Old Darwin has been replaced by something of an edifice complex—such buildings as Parliament House and the Supreme Court all seem very grand for such a small city, especially one that prides itself on its casual, outdoor-centric lifestyle. Today Darwin is the best place from which to explore Australia's Top End, with its wonders of Kakadu and the Kimberley region.
Agats, Indonesia image
Day 15
Agats, Indonesia
Kokas, Indonesia image
Day 17
Kokas, Indonesia
Misool, Raja Ampat, Indonesia image
Day 18
Misool, Raja Ampat, Indonesia
Gam Island, Indonesia image
Day 19
Gam Island, Indonesia
Kri Island, Indonesia image
Day 19
Kri Island, Indonesia
Manokwari, Irian Jaya, Indonesia image
Day 20
Manokwari, Irian Jaya, Indonesia
Cenderawasih Bay, Indonesia image
Days 21 - 22
Cenderawasih Bay, Indonesia
Jayapura, Irian Jaya, Indonesia image
Day 23
Jayapura, Irian Jaya, Indonesia
Vanimo, Papua New Guinea image
Day 24
Vanimo, Papua New Guinea
Garove Island, Papua New Guinea image
Day 26
Garove Island, Papua New Guinea
Duke of York Island, Papua New Guinea image
Day 27
Duke of York Island, Papua New Guinea
Rabaul, Bismarck Archipelago, Papua New Guinea image
Day 27
Rabaul, Bismarck Archipelago, Papua New Guinea
Rabaul, the former provincial capital, has quite a remarkable location. The town is inside the flooded caldera of a giant volcano and several sub-vents are still quite active today! The fumes of the volcano Tavurvur can be seen continually and the town suffered greatly during the last major eruption of 1994 when some 80% of the houses collapsed due to the ash raining down onto their roofs. Rabaul has a Volcano Observatory sitting atop the town’s center, monitoring the 14 active and 23 dormant volcanoes in Papua New Guinea. A small museum opposite the bunker used by Yamamoto during World War II shows exhibits relating to Rabaul’s local, German, Australian and Japanese past from the 19th century to Papua New Guinea’s independence in the 1970s.
Gizo, Solomon Islands image
Day 29
Gizo, Solomon Islands
Honiara, Guadalcanal Island, Solomon Islands image
Day 30
Honiara, Guadalcanal Island, Solomon Islands
Honiara is the capital city of the Solomon Islands on the north-western coast of Guadalcanal Island. It is the hub of all activity in the archipelago which has recently undergone an ‘urban boom’. Discover the cities beautiful landscapes and the significance of the city in the World War II.
Vanikoro Island, Solomon Islands image
Day 32
Vanikoro Island, Solomon Islands
Ambrym, Vanuatu image
Day 33
Ambrym, Vanuatu
Unlike Espiritu Santo with its raised coral reefs and white sand, Ambrym is a volcanically active island with dark sand beaches. Ambrym is known as the island of magic and is the source of five local languages that all evolved on Ambrym. This handful of languages contributes to the well over 100 languages of Vanuatu. Some of Ambrym’s magic takes place in the lush greenery of the local community of Ranon. Here the people perform a very special and traditional ‘Rom’ dance. Participants prepare their masks and costumes in secrecy and the dance is reserved for special occasions.
Lautoka, Fiji image
Day 35
Lautoka, Fiji
North of Nadi through sugarcane plantations and past the Sabeto Mountains is Lautoka, nicknamed the Sugar City for the local agriculture and its big processing mill. With a population of around 50,000, it's the only city besides Suva and, like the capital, has a pleasant waterfront. It's the sailing point for Blue Lagoon and Beachcomber Cruises but is otherwise unremarkable for tourists, itself having few hotels and fewer good restaurants. Locals recommend the city as a less-expensive place to shop for clothing, but note that it can take as long as 45 minutes to drive here. Legend has it that Lautoka acquired its name when two chiefs engaged in combat and one hit the other with a spear. He proclaimed "lau toka" (spear hit) and thus the future town was named.
Kadavu Island, Fiji image
Day 36
Kadavu Island, Fiji
Fulaga Island, Fiji image
Day 37
Fulaga Island, Fiji
Pangai, Tonga image
Day 38
Pangai, Tonga
Nukupule, Tonga image
Day 38
Nukupule, Tonga
Vava'u, Tonga image
Day 39
Vava'u, Tonga
Nuku is a small tropical island to the west of the larger Kapa Island in the Tongan group. The vivid green vegetation of the low lying island is fringed by white sand beaches that were likely formed by centuries of bright white coral skeletons being eroded into sand grains by waves and time. Living coral reefs surround the tear-drop shaped island of Nuku with a kaleidoscope of color and diverse marine life.
Apia, Samoa image
Day 42
Apia, Samoa
Samoa is a group of ten islands located in the South Pacific. The tropical climate and volcanic landscape create a picturesque location for visitors to explore, together with the experience of Fa'a Samoa, the three thousand year old way of life on Samoa.
Alofi, Niue image
Day 43
Alofi, Niue
Niue, or “The Rock” as it is known to its inhabitants, is one of the largest raised coral atolls in the Pacific, an island type named “Makatea” after an island in French Polynesia. Niue’s coast lends itself to exploration with stops at points of historical and scenic interest including opportunities for snorkeling, exploring limestone caves, and swimming in Niue’s crystal clear water.
Aitutaki, Cook Islands image
Day 45
Aitutaki, Cook Islands
Even high praise like the 'world's most beautiful island' from Lonely Planet's co-founder, Tony Wheeler, won't prepare you for the intoxicating intensity of the coal blue ocean, the glow of the pure white sand, and the soothing ripple of the palm-tree forests at incredible Aitutaki. Breathless romance hangs thick in the air here, especially when a riot of purples, reds and oranges are spreading across the sky, accompanying the sun's descent each evening. It wasn't until 1789 that Europeans discovered this island haven, with the HMS Bounty's crew arriving, just a few weeks before a mutiny tore them apart. The Europeans were beaten to the islands, however, by the streamlined wooden canoes of the Polynesian settlers, who arrived around 900AD. While Western missionaries would eventually visit to spread Christianity to the island - evidenced by the white, coral-encrusted walls of the many churches - their efforts to repress the people’s deep love of communal singing and dancing ultimately failed, and music forms a key component of the islanders' culture to this day.The beaches here are flawless, and swaying in a hammock, suspended between leaning palm trees, as the ocean gently ruffles the sand nearby, feels gloriously indulgent. Aitutaki Lagoon is a huge aquamarine pool of water, alive with a kaleidoscopic swirl of tropical fish, which lurk just below the surface. You may even be lucky enough to spot turtles padding across the sand, scraping themselves towards the open ocean.The snorkelling opportunities here, and on One Foot Island - where you'll want to acquire the badge of honour of having your passport stamped with the island's iconic huge footprint - are sublime. Don't miss the tiny island of Moturakau either, which is crammed full of exotic birds and crabs, who have dominion over the island's tangled, jungle terrain. 
Raiatea, French Polynesia image
Day 47
Raiatea, French Polynesia
Huahine, French Polynesia image
Day 48
Huahine, French Polynesia
Papeete, Tahiti, French Polynesia image
Day 49
Papeete, Tahiti, French Polynesia
Papeete will be your gateway to the tropical paradise of French Polynesia, where islands fringed with gorgeous beaches and turquoise ocean await to soothe the soul. This spirited city is the capital of French Polynesia, and serves as a superb base for onward exploration of Tahiti – an island of breathtaking landscapes and oceanic vistas. Wonderful lagoons of crisp, clear water beg to be snorkelled, stunning black beaches and blowholes pay tribute to the island's volcanic heritage, and lush green mountains beckon you inland on adventures, as you explore extraordinary Tahiti. Visit to relax inside picturesque stilted huts, which stand out over shimmering water, as you settle into the intoxicating rhythm of life, in this Polynesian paradise.
Anaa, French Polynesia image
Day 50
Anaa, French Polynesia
Fakarava, French Polynesia image
Day 51
Fakarava, French Polynesia
Pitcairn Island, Pitcairn image
Day 55
Pitcairn Island, Pitcairn
With a total of 56 residents on the island, Adamstown is the capital of the Pitcairn Islands and the only populated settlement, as all of the other Pitcairn Islands are uninhabited (although were populated by Polynesians in the 11th through 15th centuries). Halfway between Peru and New Zealand, Pitcairn was the perfect hiding spot for the famed HMS Bounty mutineers and their Tahitian wives. Not only had the island been misplaced on early maps of the region, but it can also be very difficult to come ashore as large breakers tend to build up just in front of the small harbour of Bounty Bay. On shore visit the local museum that houses the HMS Bounty Bible, the historic Adamstown Church, view Fletcher Christian’s cave, or keep an eye out for the Pitcairn Reed Warbler.
Henderson Island, Pitcairn image
Day 56
Henderson Island, Pitcairn
On this remote and uninhabited piece of land – a raised coral island virtually untouched by man – you will get a true sense of how the landscape has appeared for endless years, while gaining an understanding of how natural selection has resulted in Henderson’s primary attraction: four endemic land birds. To protect the rare, natural state of Henderson Island, UNESCO designated it as a World Heritage Site in 1988.
Ducie Island, Pitcairn image
Day 57
Ducie Island, Pitcairn
Discovered in 1606 by a Portuguese explorer, Ducie is a small isolated atoll and is the easternmost of the Pitcairn Islands. The island’s most prominent bit of history is the 1881 wreckage of the mail ship Acadia, which ran aground on the island when the lookout mistook the island for a cloud due to its white beaches. Ducie is a mere speck in the surrounding expanse of ocean, uninhabited except for the estimated 500,000 nesting seabirds that reside among the two plant species (Beach Heliotrope and at least one specimen of Pemphis) that grow over seventy percent of the island. Bird species that visitors may be able to see include Murphy's Petrels, White Terns, Great Frigate birds and Masked Boobies. Snorkelers love to visit the top of the wreck of the Acadia or in the atoll’s lagoon waters.
Hangaroa, Easter Island, Chile image
Days 60 - 61
Hangaroa, Easter Island, Chile
Discovered (by the Western world) on Easter Sunday, 1722, Easter Island is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of the most isolated places on the face of the Earth, some 2,300 miles from the Chilean mainland. Although more Polynesian than South American in character, the 64-square mile island was annexed by Chile in 1888, and is now famous as the world’s largest ‘open air museum’ on account of the Moai, or human-like stone statues, that can be found on the island. The Moai remain very much a mystery, which archaeologists are still trying to unlock by interpreting an ancient language of the Rapa Nui, which is the key to understanding this culture, and is written on the so called ‘rongo rongo tablets’. The island owes its origin to three volcanoes which erupted some three million years ago: Poike, Rano Kau and Maunga Terevaka. It is not known when or how the island was first populated, but the most credible theory suggests that the Rapa Nui people came from other Pacific islands in the 4th century AD. In addition to the cultural and archaeological interest, there are the beautiful beaches, transparent waters, and coral reefs that might be expected of a Pacific Island.
Alejandro Selkirk Island, Chile image
Day 66
Alejandro Selkirk Island, Chile
Alejandro Selkirk Island is part of the Juan Fernandez archipelago. The island itself was renamed in 1966 after the marooned sailor who served as the template for Daniel Defoe’s novel Robinson Crusoe, although Alejandro Selkirk was a castaway on a different island, named Robinson Crusoe Island. Alejandro Selkirk is located 165 kilometres west of the other islands in the archipelago. Throughout much of its history, the island has been uninhabited, although there is a former penal settlement on the middle of the east coast, which operated from 1909 to 1930. During the summer months, Selkirk welcomes a community of lobster fishermen and their families who come from Robinson Crusoe. As part of the Chilean National Park, it also holds the UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve title. The island is home to a number of rare and endangered plant and animal species. One of those iconic species—the Masafuera Rayadito—is found only on Selkirk; its global population numbers in the low hundreds and it is of particular interest to researchers and those looking to prevent species extinctions.
San Juan Bautista (Robinson Crusoe Island), Chile image
Day 67
San Juan Bautista (Robinson Crusoe Island), Chile
Robinson Crusoe Island is located 600 kilometres off the coast of Chile. The island is a rugged volcanic speck where 70 percent of its plant species are endemic, and is the largest of the Juan Fernandez Islands, a small archipelago that since 1935 is a Chilean National Park which was declared a UNESCO World Biosphere Reserve. This island has witnessed and played an important role in Chilean and world history. In 1750 the village of San Juan Bautista was founded at Cumberland Bay and by 1779 there were already 7 fortresses bristling with guns. The island’s isolation offered Spain a splendid place for setting up a penal colony, to which high-ranking Chilean patriots were deported in the early 19th century. In 1915, during the First World War, three British ships and a German one, the Dresden, engaged in a sea battle which ended with the scuttling of the German cruiser. Today there are currently around one thousand people living in the archipelago, most of them in the village of San Juan Bautista engaged in fishing for the “pincer-less lobster”, a delicacy in the mainland.
San Antonio, Chile image
Day 69
San Antonio, Chile
San Antonio greets you with its serene landscapes, from the sun-kissed River Walk to the historic Alamo, setting the stage for a genuine local experience. The warm, inviting climate year-round enhances the area's unique charm, perfect for those looking to immerse themselves in the true essence of Texan life. Here, tradition thrives in the bustling markets and lively festivals, offering a vivid display of authentic Texan customs and a departure from typical tourist destinations. A unique fact about San Antonio is that it hosts the largest mariachi festival in the world every year, a true spectacle of local sound and color.
Ship Details
Seabourn
Seabourn Pursuit

Construction for Seabourn Pursuit began in fall 2020 during a ceremony in San Giorgo di Nogare, Italy, and the build process is well underway. The ship is scheduled for delivery in 2023, with its sister ship, Seabourn Venture, slated for delivery in 2022.

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